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ECHR Judgement of 11/16/2004. Case of Moreno Gómez v. Spain
The applicant complained of noise and of being disturbed at night by nightclubs near her home at Valencia (Spain). The Court found that there had been a breach of the rights protected by Article 8 of the Convention as the City Council had tolerated, and thus contributed to, the repeated flouting of the rules which it itself had established and the respondent State had failed to discharge its obligation to guarantee her right to respect for her home and her private life.
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In the case of Moreno Gómez v. Spain,
The European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:
Sir Nicolas BRATZA, President, Mr M.
PELLONPÄÄ, Mr J. CASADEVALL, Mr S.
PAVLOVSCHI, Mr J. BORREGO BORREGO, Mrs E.
FURA-SANDSTRÖM, Ms L. MIJOVIC, judges, and Mr M.
O'BOYLE, Section Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 29 June
and 26 October 2004, Delivers the following judgment,
which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
1. The case originated
in an application (no. 4143/02) against the Kingdom of
Spain lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a Spanish
national, Ms Pilar Moreno Gómez (“the applicant”), on 22
November 2001. 2. The applicant was
represented by Mr Andrés Morey Navarro, of the Valencia
Bar. The Spanish Government (“the Government”) were
represented by Mr Ignacio Blasco Lozano, Agent of the
Government and Head of the Legal Department of the
Human-Rights Office at the Ministry of
Justice. 3. The applicant alleged a
breach of her right to respect for her home, contrary to
Article 8 of the Convention. 4. The
application was allocated to the Fourth Section of the
Court (Rule 52 § 1 of the Rules of Court). Within that
Section, the Chamber that would consider the case
(Article 27 § 1 of the Convention) was constituted as
provided in Rule 26 § 1 of the Rules of
Court. 5. By a decision of 29 June
2004 the Chamber declared the application
admissible. 6. The applicant and the
Government each filed observations on the merits (Rule
59 § 1). 7. On 14 September 2004 the
applicant, but not the Government, lodged a written
reply to the Government's observations. She also set out
her claim for just satisfaction.
THE FACTS I.
THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
8. The applicant was
born in 1948 and lives in Valencia.
A. Background to the
case
9. The applicant
has lived in a flat in a residential quarter of Valencia
since 1970. 10. Since 1974 the
Valencia City Council has allowed licensed premises such
as bars, pubs and discotheques to open in the vicinity
of her home, making it impossible for people living in
the area to sleep. 11. Local
residents first complained about vandalism and noise in
the locality before 1980. 12. In
view of the problems caused by the noise, the Valencia
City Council resolved on 22 December 1983 not to permit
any more night clubs to open in the area. However, the
resolution was never implemented and new licences were
granted. 13. In 1993 the City
Council commissioned a report by an expert. The expert
found that the noise levels were unacceptable and
exceeded permitted levels. At 3.35 a.m. on Saturdays
they were in excess of 100 dBA Leq (decibels), ranging
from 101 to 115.9 dBA Leq. 14. In a
report of 31 January 1995 the police informed the
Valencia City Council that nightclubs and discotheques
in the sector in which the applicant lived did not
systematically close on time. They said that they were
able to confirm that the local residents' complaints
were founded. 15. On 28 June 1996
the City Council approved a new bylaw on noise and
vibrations, which was published on 23 July 1996 in the
Official Gazette of Valencia province. Article 8 of the
bylaw lays down that in a family residential area (such
as the one in which the applicant lives) external noise
levels were not to exceed 45 dBA Leq between 10 p.m. and
8 a.m. Article 30 of the bylaw defines “acoustically
saturated zones” as areas in which the large number of
establishments, activity of the people frequenting them
and passing traffic expose local residents to high noise
levels and cause them serious
disturbance. 16. Lastly, the bylaw
specified the conditions that had to be satisfied for an
area to be designated an “acoustically saturated zone”
(zona acústicamente saturada) and the consequences of
designation, which included a ban on new activities
(such as nightclubs and discotheques) that led to
acoustic saturation. 17. Following a
resolution of the Valencia City Council sitting in
plenary session on 27 December 1996, which was published
in the Official Gazette of the Valencia province on 27
January 1997, the area in which the applicant lived was
designated an acoustically saturated
zone. 18. However, on 30 January
1997 the City Council granted a licence for a
discotheque to be opened in the building she lived in.
The licence was subsequently declared invalid by a
judgment of the Supreme Court of 17 October
2001. 19. In order to determine
whether the area should be designated an acoustically
saturated zone, the City Council took various
sound-level readings to monitor acoustic pollution
there. In each of its reports the City Council
laboratory indicated that the noise levels exceeded
those permitted by the bylaw.
B. Court
proceedings
20. The applicant was
exasperated by the situation, which prevented her from
sleeping and resting and caused her insomnia and serious
health problems. On 21 August 1997 she lodged a
preliminary claim with the Valencia City Council in
which she relied on Article 15 (right to life and to
physical integrity) and Article 18 § 2 (right to the
privacy and inviolability of the home). She sought 3,907
euros (650,000 pesetas) for the damage she had sustained
and the cost of installing double
glazing. 21. Having received no
reply from the authorities and in accordance with the
Fundamental Rights (Protection) Act (Law no. 62/1978),
the applicant lodged an application for judicial review
with the Valencia High Court of Justice on 25 November
1997, alleging a violation of Articles 15 and 18 § 2 of
the Constitution. 22. On 2 October
1997 the Valencia City Council lodged its written
observations. It submitted that the application was
premature and should be declared inadmissible, as the
Council could still find a solution. This preliminary
objection was dismissed in a decision of 27 October
1997. 23. On 11 December 1997 the
representative of state council's office argued that the
court should find in favour of the applicant. He
considered that there had been a violation of Articles
15 and 18 § 2 of the Constitution and that the
applicant's claim for damages was
justified. 24. In a judgment of 21
July 1998, delivered after an adversarial hearing in
public, the Valencia High Court of Justice dismissed the
application for judicial review. It found that the
readings had been taken in the entrance hall to the
building, not in the applicant's flat, and could not
entail a violation of Articles 15 and 18 § 2 of the
Constitution; it also noted that the medical expert's
report stated only that the applicant had been receiving
treatment for insomnia for several years, without
indicating the length of or reason for such
treatment. 25. On 9 October 1998 the
applicant lodged an amparo appeal with the
Constitutional Court. Relying on Articles 14 (equality)
and 24 (right to a fair hearing) of the Constitution,
she complained that the High Court of Justice had not
given sufficient reasons in its judgment or assessed the
evidence. She also complained under Articles 15 and 18 §
2 of the Constitution of a violation of her rights to
life, physical and mental integrity, privacy and the
inviolability of the home. 26. In a
decision of 29 May 2000, the Constitutional Court
declared the amparo appeal admissible and invited the
applicant, the representative of state council's office
and the Valencia City Council to submit their
observations. On the same day, it summoned the parties
to a hearing on the merits on 16 May
2001. 27. At the hearing on 16 May
2001, which was attended by all the parties, the
applicant repeated her factual and legal submissions,
stressing that there had been a violation of her
fundamental rights. 28. The Valencia
City Council raised a number of preliminary objections.
It further submitted that the appeal was confined to the
decision of the Valencia High Court of Justice. With
regard to the alleged violation of Articles 15 and 18 §
2 of the Constitution, it alleged that there was no
evidence of noise levels inside the applicant's home and
that the authority concerned should not bear sole
responsibility for the noise to which the applicant had
allegedly been exposed, as it had very limited means at
its disposal to combat it. 29. The
representative of state council's office agreed with the
applicant that there had been a violation of Articles 15
and 18 § 2 of the Constitution. He argued that the
amparo appeal should be regarded as hybrid, since it
both accused the Valencia City Council of failing to
defend the fundamental rights set out in Articles 15 and
18 of the Constitution and challenged the Valencia High
Court of Justice's decision, alleging a violation of
Articles 14 and 24 of the Constitution
also. 30. As regards the violation
of Articles 15 and 18 § 2 of the Constitution, the
representative of state council's office said that, in
the light of the judgments of the European Court of
Human Rights, in particular in the case of López Ostra
v. Spain, there had been a violation of the applicant's
right to the inviolability of her home, as her home
environment had been rendered unfit for ordinary
everyday living. On the basis of the Court's case-law,
he sought a broader definition of the constitutional
concept of the “home”. 31. As
regards noise levels inside the applicant's home, the
representative of state council's office considered that
the burden of proof had been reversed, as it was clear
in the instant case that officials from the City Council
had confirmed on a number of occasions that the maximum
permitted levels were being exceeded. Consequently, he
did not consider it necessary to require such proof from
the applicant. 32. In a judgment of
29 May 2001, which was served on 31 May 2001, the
Constitutional Court dismissed the appeal after also
dismissing the Valencia City Council's preliminary
objections. It ruled that the amparo appeal was hybrid
in nature, that is to say that it alleged a violation of
Articles 15 and 18 § 2 of the Constitution by the
Valencia City Council and a breach of Articles 14 and 24
of the Constitution by the Valencia High Court of
Justice. 33. As regards the alleged
violation of Articles 14 and 24 of the Constitution, the
Constitutional Court began by noting that it was not
entitled to substitute the High Court's assessment of
the evidence with its own. As to the applicant's
allegation that the judgment did not contain sufficient
reasons, it noted that the High Court's decision could
not be regarded as arbitrary or unreasonable. It further
observed that the applicant had not identified the
decisions on which she relied in alleging
discrimination. Thus, there was no evidence of any
violation of Articles 14 and 24 of the
Constitution. 34. With regard to the
alleged violation of Articles 15 (right to life and
physical integrity) and 18 § 2 (right to privacy and to
the inviolability of the home) of the Constitution, the
Constitutional Court referred to the decisions in which
the European Court of Human Rights had held that, in
cases of exceptional gravity, repeated damage to the
environment could infringe the right to respect for
private and family life under Article 8 § 1 of the
Convention, even if did not endanger health. The
Constitutional Court held, however: “... there may
only be a violation of Article 15 of the Constitution if
the level of acoustic saturation to which a person is
exposed as a result of an act or omission of a public
authority causes serious and immediate damage to his or
her health.” 35. The Constitutional
Court found that that test had not been satisfied in the
case before it and pointed out: “... even though the
appellant maintains that the noise levels to which she
was exposed turned her into an insomniac, the only
evidence she has adduced is a certificate stating that
she was admitted to hospital and saw a doctor, without
any indication of the period for which she had been
suffering from lack of sleep or the cause thereof.
...” 36. The Constitutional Court
found that the applicant had not established a direct
link between the noise and the damage she had
sustained. 37. As to the allegation
of a violation of Article 18 of the Constitution, the
Constitutional Court further found that she had not
established the existence of a nuisance in her home that
amounted to a violation of the constitutional provision.
It stated: “... the appellant has confined herself to
making a general complaint by stating that the origin of
the noise was diffuse and not restricted to a single
source of production, and that the acoustic saturation
resulted from a combination of noises. ... on the
contrary, her entire case is based on a few sound-level
readings taken inside her home which gave disparate
results ... and do not establish that there has been a
violation of the right relied on.
...” 38. By way of conclusion, the
Constitutional Court dismissed the amparo appeal on the
following ground: “Consequently, as regards the
alleged violation of the rights relied on the amparo
appeal must be dismissed, as the appellant has failed to
prove the existence of a genuine effective breach of
fundamental rights attributable to the Valencia City
Council.” 39. That judgment was
delivered by the Constitutional Court sitting as a full
court. However, two judges expressed concurring
opinions. The first said that the judgment restricted
the free development of the personality at home. He
considered that the conditions that had to be satisfied
for there to be a violation of fundamental rights in the
case under consideration were unreasonable and he
defended the need to speak of a triple layer of
constitutional protection, ranging from the right to
physical and moral integrity (Article 15 of the
Constitution) to an environment that was suitable for
personal development (Article 45 § 1 of the
Constitution), via the right to privacy in the home
(Article 18 § 2 of the
Constitution). 40. The second judge
pointed out in his concurring opinion that there was a
preliminary problem that had not been adequately dealt
with, namely the degree to which the relevant authority
was required to provide the requested protection.
Determining the extent of that obligation was a
prerequisite to establishing whether or not there
existed a causal link between the authority's failure to
act and the alleged violation. The authorities were
obliged to exercise their power when the breach of the
fundamental rights attained a certain level of
gravity.
II. RELEVANT
DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
A. The
Constitution
41. The relevant
provisions of the Constitution read as
follows: Article 10 § 2 “The provisions relating
to the fundamental rights and freedoms recognised under
the Constitution shall be construed in accordance with
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
international treaties and agreements which Spain has
ratified in that sphere.” Article 15 “Everyone
shall have the right to life and to physical and mental
integrity. ...”
Article 18 § 2 “The home shall
be inviolable. ...” Article 45 § 1 “Everyone shall
have the right to enjoy an environment suitable for
personal development and the duty to preserve
it. ...” Article 53 § 2 “Every citizen shall be
entitled to seek protection of the freedoms and rights
recognised in Article 14 and in the first section of
Chapter II by bringing an action in the ordinary courts
under a procedure designed to ensure priority and
expedition and, in appropriate cases, by an appeal
(recurso de amparo) to the Constitutional
Court...”
B. The Fundamental
Rights (Protection) Act (Law no. 62/1978)
42. Section 6,
which was repealed by the Administrative Courts Act of
13 July 1998 (Law no. 29/1998), read as follows: “...
[a]n application for judicial review may be brought in
accordance with the procedural rules set out in this
section in respect of decisions of the public
authorities that are subject to administrative law and
liable to affect the exercise of the fundamental rights
of the person...”
C. The Constitutional
Court Act
43. The relevant
part of Article 44 of the Constitutional Court Act
reads: “1. An amparo appeal for violations of rights
and guarantees amenable to constitutional protection ...
will lie only if: ... (c) the party relying on the
alleged violation formally pleads it in the relevant
proceedings after becoming aware of its
occurrence.” D. The bylaw on noise and vibrations
issued by the Valencia City Council on 28 June
1986 44. The relevant provisions of
the bylaw provide:
Article 8 § 1 “Permitted
external noise-reception levels shall be determined by
reference to the main user of each of the areas marked
on the city development plan and shall not
exceed: Maximum reception levels: ... Multiple
family residence: Daytime (from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.):
55 dB (A) Night-time (from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m.): 45 dB
(A) ...” Article 30 “1. Zones that are
acoustically saturated by additional causes are areas or
places in which the large number of establishments,
activity of the people frequenting them and passing
traffic expose local residents to high noise levels and
cause them serious disturbance. 2. An area may be
designated an acoustically saturated zone (ASZ) if,
though individual activities are compliant with the
levels set out in this bylaw, the level of disturbance
due to external noise as referred to in Article 8 is
exceeded twice-weekly in consecutive weeks, or three
times intermittently over a period of 35 days, and
exceeds 20 dB (A).”
E. The expert
report
45. The relevant
parts of the report drawn up by Mr X, a professor of
applied physics, on the sound-level readings taken in
the district in which the applicant lived in Valencia
read as follows: “The results obtained from
measurements taken by the Valencia University acoustic
laboratory over a period of several years in the said
area and measurements taken by other bodies showed that
ambient noise levels in this area, in particular at
nights and weekends (especially between 1 a.m. and 3
a.m.) are extremely high. At these periods in the area
concerned the hourly equivalent sound levels (Leq)
frequently exceed 70 dB (A) and the maximum
corresponding levels exceed 80 dB (A). As a result,
we can say that noise levels in dwellings in this urban
area are intolerably high at night-time and,
consequently, detrimental to the health and well-being
of the residents. This conclusion is based on the
fact that, even with the windows closed (including in
the height of summer), indoor noise levels are very
high. It should be noted that under the current
regulations (building norm NBE-CA-88) the minimum
insulation requirement for the frontage of buildings is
30 dB (A). In practice, that figure is never attained
and is generally in the region of 15 to 20 dB
(A). Consequently, in these circumstances, night-time
noise levels inside the dwellings, for example in
bedrooms overlooking the street, can be estimated at in
the region of 50 dB (A), with maximum levels reaching
approximately 60 dB (A). We would point out that this is
a general estimate and is made without the need for
specific measurements to be taken inside the dwellings
concerned. We should explain here that the difference
between 50 or 60 dB (A) and 30 dB (A) is enormous. Thus,
an increase from 30 to 33 dB (A) does not represent a
slight increase in noise (as a layman might think) but
the doubling in intensity of the corresponding noise. An
informed reading of this report is only possible if the
meaning of the “decibel” unit used here is correctly
understood.”
THE
LAW I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE
8 OF THE CONVENTION
46. The applicant
complained of noise and of being disturbed at night by
nightclubs near her home. She alleged that the Spanish
authorities were responsible and that the resulting
onslaught of sound constituted a violation of her right
to respect for her home, as guaranteed by Article 8,
which reads as follows: Article 8 “1. Everyone has
the right to respect for his private and family life,
his home and his correspondence. 2. There shall be no
interference by a public authority with the exercise of
this right except as such as is in accordance with the
law and is necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of national security, public safety or the
well-being of the country, for the protection of health
or morals, or for the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others.”
A. Submissions
of the parties
1.
The applicant
47. The applicant
complained of inaction on the part of the local
authorities in Valencia, in particular the City Council,
which had failed to put a stop to the night-time
disturbances. She said that the Government had not put
forward any explanation for the failure to
act. 48. Firstly, although the
Valencia City Council was not the direct source of the
noise pollution, it had, in the applicant's submission,
caused the acoustic saturation by issuing an unlimited
number of licences, without taking measures to comply
with the law. The applicant referred to the principles
that had been established in the case of Lopez Ostra v.
Spain (judgment of 9 December 1994, Series A no. 303 C,
§ 51), which concerned the effects of pollution outside
the home but also the frame of reference for fundamental
rights, in particular the home. She added that the
municipal bylaw required measurements of noise emissions
from external sources to be taken at the front of the
building in which the dwelling was
located. 49. In her additional
observations of 14 September 2004, the applicant
observed that the level of the night-time disturbance
(from 10 p.m. to 6. 30 p.m.) caused by more than 127
nightclubs infringed the right to health, as indeed was
confirmed by the World Health Organisation's guidelines.
Unlike the position in the case of Hatton and Others v.
the United Kingdom [GC] (no. 36022/97, ECHR 2003-VIII),
her home was neither within nor adjacent to an area of
vital importance, such as an area relevant to a
strategic transport or communications infrastructure.
She stressed that her home was in an urban area,
specifically, a residential one.
2. The
Government
50. The Government
submitted that the noise to which the applicant referred
came from private activities and that, consequently,
there had not been direct interference by the public
authority in the right to the intimacy of the home and
to respect for private and family life. They added that
the Valencia City Council had taken various steps in
order to solve the problem of acoustic pollution in the
area in which the applicant lived. These included
preparing and approving a comprehensive and stringent
municipal bylaw, designating acoustically saturated
zones and a policy of imposing penalties, withdrawing
licences and prosecuting
offenders. 51. Even assuming that
the applicant had been exposed from time to time to
acoustic pollution and had been able to prove the effect
of the noise inside her home, the relevant authorities
had already taken sufficient measures to remedy the
situation. 52. In addition, the
courts had noted in their decisions that the applicant
had failed to establish that she had been exposed to
noise inside her home emanating from night-time
disturbances and that, in any event, Article 8
protection was restricted to the home and could not
apply when the subject matter of the complaint was a
nuisance outside the home. The Government accordingly
maintained that no interference with the applicant's
right to respect for her home could be found.
B. The Court's
assessment
1.
General principles
53. Article 8 of
the Convention protects the individual's right to
respect for his private and family life, his home and
his correspondence. A home will usually be the place,
the physically defined area, where private and family
life develops. The individual has a right to respect for
his home, meaning not just the right to the actual
physical area, but also to the quiet enjoyment of that
area. Breaches of the right to respect of the home are
not confined to concrete or physical breaches, such as
unauthorised entry into a person's home, but also
include those that are not concrete or physical, such as
noise, emissions, smells or other forms of interference.
A serious breach may result in the breach of a person's
right to respect for his home if it prevents him from
enjoying the amenities of his home (see Hatton and
Others v. the United Kingdom cited above, § 96).
54. Thus in the case of Powell and
Rayner v. the United Kingdom (judgment of 21 February
1990, Series A no. 172, § 40), the Court declared
Article 8 applicable because: “In each case, albeit to
greatly differing degrees, the quality of the
applicant's private life and the scope for enjoying the
amenities of his home ha[d] been adversely affected by
the noise generated by aircraft using Heathrow Airport”.
In the aforementioned case of López Ostra v. Spain,
which concerned noise pollution and a waste-treatment
plant, the Court said: “severe environmental pollution
may affect individuals' well-being and prevent them from
enjoying their homes in such a way as to affect their
private and family life adversely, without, however,
seriously endangering their health”. In the case of
Guerra and Others v. Italy (judgment of 19 February
1998, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998-I, § 57),
the Court observed: “The direct effect of the toxic
emissions on the applicants' right to respect for their
private and family life means that Article 8 is
applicable”. Lastly, in the case of Surugiu v. Romania
(no. 48995/99, 20 April 2004), which concerned various
acts of harassment by third parties who entered the
applicant's yard and dumped several cartloads of manure
in front of the door and under the windows of the house,
the Court found that the acts constituted repeated
interference by third parties with the applicant's right
to respect for his home and that Article 8 of the
Convention was applicable. 55.
Although the object of Article 8 is essentially that of
protecting the individual against arbitrary interference
by the public authorities, it may involve the
authorities' adopting measures designed to secure
respect for private life even in the sphere of the
relations of individuals between themselves (see, among
other authorities, Stubbings and Others v. the United
Kingdom, judgment of 22 October 1996, Reports of
Judgments and Decisions 1996-IV, pp. 1505, § 62; and
Surugiu v. Romania, cited above, § 59). Whether the case
is analysed in terms of a positive duty on the State to
take reasonable and appropriate measures to secure the
applicants' rights under paragraph 1 of Article 8 or in
terms of an interference by a public authority to be
justified in accordance with paragraph 2, the applicable
principles are broadly similar. In both contexts regard
must be had to the fair balance that has to be struck
between the competing interests of the individual and of
the community as a whole. Furthermore, even in relation
to the positive obligations flowing from the first
paragraph of Article 8, in striking the required balance
the aims mentioned in the second paragraph may be of a
certain relevance (see Hatton and Others v. the United
Kingdom, cited above, § 98). 56. The
Court reiterates that the Convention is intended to
guarantee rights that are “practical and effective”, not
“theoretical or illusory” (see, among other authorities,
Papamichalopoulos and Others v. Greece, judgment of 24
June 1993, Series A no. 260-B, § 42).
2.
Application of the above principles in the instant
case
57. The present
case does not concern interference by public authorities
with the right to respect for the home, but their
failure to take action to put a stop to third-party
breaches of the right relied on by the applicant.
58. The Court notes that the
applicant lives in an area that is indisputably subject
to night-time disturbances; this clearly unsettles the
applicant as she goes about her daily life, particularly
at weekends. The Court must now determine whether the
nuisance caused by the noise attained the minimum level
of severity required for it to constitute a violation of
Article 8. 59. The Government have
argued that the domestic courts found that the applicant
has failed to establish the noise levels inside her
home. The Court considers that it would be unduly
formalistic to require such evidence in the instant
case, as the City authorities have already designated
the area in which the applicant lives an acoustically
saturated zone, which, according to the terms of the
municipal bylaw of 28 June 1986, means an area in which
local residents are exposed to high noise levels which
cause them serious disturbance (see paragraph 44 above).
In the present case, the fact that the maximum permitted
noise levels have been exceeded has been confirmed on a
number of occasions by council staff (see paragraphs 14
and 19 above). Consequently, there appears to be no need
to require a person from an acoustically saturated zone
such as the one in which the applicant lives to adduce
evidence of a fact of which the municipal authority is
already officially aware. Thus, in the domestic
proceedings, the representative of state council's
office did not consider it necessary to require the
applicant to adduce such evidence (see paragraph 31
above) and added that there had been a reversal of the
burden of proof in the present
case. 60. In view of its volume – at
night and beyond permitted levels – and the fact that it
continued over a number of years, the Court finds that
there has been a breach of the rights protected by
Article 8. 61. Although the Valencia
City Council has used its powers in this sphere to adopt
measures (such as the bylaw concerning noise and
vibrations) which should in principle have been adequate
to secure respect for the guaranteed rights, it
tolerated, and thus contributed to, the repeated
flouting of the rules which it itself had established
during the period concerned. Regulations to protect
guaranteed rights serve little purpose if they are not
duly enforced and the Court must reiterate that the
Convention is intended to protect effective rights, not
illusory ones. The facts show that the applicant
suffered a serious infringement of her right to respect
for her home as a result of the authorities' failure to
take action to deal with the night-time
disturbances. 62. In these
circumstances, the Court finds that the respondent State
has failed to discharge its positive obligation to
guarantee the applicant's right to respect for her home
and her private life, in breach of Article 8 of the
Convention. 63. There has
consequently been a violation of that
provision.
II.
APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE
CONVENTION
64. Article 41 of
the Convention provides: “If the Court finds that
there has been a violation of the Convention or the
Protocols thereto, and if the internal law of the High
Contracting Party concerned allows only partial
reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary,
afford just satisfaction to the injured
party.”
A.
Damage
65. The applicant
claimed 879 euros (EUR) on account of pecuniary damage
for the double glazing she had had installed in her
bedroom. She also claimed EUR 3,005 for non-pecuniary
damage. 66. The Government did not
make any submissions on this
point. 67. The Court notes that the
sole ground for awarding the applicant just satisfaction
in the instant case is the failure of the relevant
authorities to take the action they could reasonably
have been expected to take to put a stop to the
infringement of the applicant's right to respect for her
home. The Court therefore finds that there was a causal
link between the violation of the Convention and any
pecuniary damage sustained by the applicant. She is
therefore entitled to an award under that head. Ruling
on an equitable basis, as required by Article 41, it
finds that the authorities' failure to take action
undeniably caused the applicant non-pecuniary damage for
which she should also receive compensation and awards
her EUR 3,884 for pecuniary and non-pecuniary
damage.
B. Costs and
expenses
68. The applicant
also claimed EUR 4,952.15 for the costs and expenses she
had incurred before the domestic courts and the Court.
In her statement of account, she breaks down her claim
into (1) the fees and expenses of her representative in
the proceedings before the domestic courts (EUR
2,091.53), (2) the fees and expenses of her
representative in the proceedings before the European
Court of Human Rights (EUR 2,091.53) and (3) the cost of
translation services (EUR 769.10). 69.
The Government did not make any submissions on
this point. 70. Under the Court's
case-law, applicants may recover reimbursement of their
costs and expenses only in so far as they have been
actually and necessarily incurred and are reasonable as
to quantum. In the instant case, and having regard to
the material before it and the aforementioned criteria,
the Court considers it reasonable to award the applicant
EUR 4,500.
C. Default
interest
71. The Court
considers it appropriate that the default interest
should be based on the marginal lending rate of the
European Central Bank, to which should be added three
percentage points.
FOR THESE
REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
1. Holds that there
has been a violation of Article 8 of the
Convention;
2. Holds (a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicant, within
three months from the date on which the judgment becomes
final according to Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the
following sums; (i) EUR 3,884 (three thousand eight
hundred and eighty-four euros) for pecuniary and
non-pecuniary damage; (ii) EUR 4,500 (four thousand
five hundred euros) in respect of costs and
expenses; (b) that from the expiry of the
above-mentioned three months until settlement simple
interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate
equal to the marginal lending rate of the European
Central Bank during the default period plus three
percentage points;
3. Dismisses the
remainder of the claim for just satisfaction. Done in
French and notified in writing on 16 November 2004,
pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of
Court.
Michael O'BOYLE
Registrar |
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Nicolas BRATZA
President |
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